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#khankhuuluu — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #khankhuuluu, aggregated by home.social.

  1. Alectrosaurus (Beasts of the Mesozoic by Creative Beast Studio)

    I’ll be honest, I initially planned to skip this figure back when it was originally announced in 2020 due to the animal in question’s fragmentary nature currently consisting of hind limb material for the most part. That’s despite the beautiful prototype it got later on, which was certainly tempting. Enter the “dragon prince” Khankhuuluu mongoliensis described just last year, which gave me […]

    Read more... https://dinotoyblog.com/alectrosaurus-beasts-of-the-mesozoic-by-creative-beast-studio/ #Alectrosaurus #Khankhuuluu
  2. Alectrosaurus (Beasts of the Mesozoic by Creative Beast Studio)

    I’ll be honest, I initially planned to skip this figure back when it was originally announced in 2020 due to the animal in question’s fragmentary nature currently consisting of hind limb material for the most part. That’s despite the beautiful prototype it got later on, which was certainly tempting. Enter the “dragon prince” Khankhuuluu mongoliensis described just last year, which gave me […]

    Read more... https://dinotoyblog.com/alectrosaurus-beasts-of-the-mesozoic-by-creative-beast-studio/ #Alectrosaurus #Khankhuuluu
  3. Alectrosaurus (Beasts of the Mesozoic by Creative Beast Studio)

    I’ll be honest, I initially planned to skip this figure back when it was originally announced in 2020 due to the animal in question’s fragmentary nature currently consisting of hind limb material for the most part. That’s despite the beautiful prototype it got later on, which was certainly tempting. Enter the “dragon prince” Khankhuuluu mongoliensis described just last year, which gave me […]

    Read more... https://dinotoyblog.com/alectrosaurus-beasts-of-the-mesozoic-by-creative-beast-studio/ #Alectrosaurus #Khankhuuluu
  4. Meet Khankhuuluu mongoliensis, the Dragon Prince of Mongolia paleonerdish.wordpress.com/202 by @Ferwen

    "The spread of #tyrannosaurs began about 90 million years ago when a species similar to #Khankhuuluu crossed from Asia into America. 79 Mya, at least one lineage returned to Asia. Two distinct lineages were given rise to by this: one smaller and slender, one giant and stocky. One of these large-bodied tyrannosaurs then dispersed back into America around 70 Mya, resulting in T. rex"

  5. Meet Khankhuuluu mongoliensis, the Dragon Prince of Mongolia paleonerdish.wordpress.com/202 by @Ferwen

    "The spread of #tyrannosaurs began about 90 million years ago when a species similar to #Khankhuuluu crossed from Asia into America. 79 Mya, at least one lineage returned to Asia. Two distinct lineages were given rise to by this: one smaller and slender, one giant and stocky. One of these large-bodied tyrannosaurs then dispersed back into America around 70 Mya, resulting in T. rex"

  6. Meet Khankhuuluu mongoliensis, the Dragon Prince of Mongolia paleonerdish.wordpress.com/202 by @Ferwen

    "The spread of #tyrannosaurs began about 90 million years ago when a species similar to #Khankhuuluu crossed from Asia into America. 79 Mya, at least one lineage returned to Asia. Two distinct lineages were given rise to by this: one smaller and slender, one giant and stocky. One of these large-bodied tyrannosaurs then dispersed back into America around 70 Mya, resulting in T. rex"

  7. Meet Khankhuuluu mongoliensis, the Dragon Prince of Mongolia paleonerdish.wordpress.com/202 by @Ferwen

    "The spread of #tyrannosaurs began about 90 million years ago when a species similar to #Khankhuuluu crossed from Asia into America. 79 Mya, at least one lineage returned to Asia. Two distinct lineages were given rise to by this: one smaller and slender, one giant and stocky. One of these large-bodied tyrannosaurs then dispersed back into America around 70 Mya, resulting in T. rex"

  8. Meet Khankhuuluu mongoliensis, the Dragon Prince of Mongolia paleonerdish.wordpress.com/202 by @Ferwen

    "The spread of #tyrannosaurs began about 90 million years ago when a species similar to #Khankhuuluu crossed from Asia into America. 79 Mya, at least one lineage returned to Asia. Two distinct lineages were given rise to by this: one smaller and slender, one giant and stocky. One of these large-bodied tyrannosaurs then dispersed back into America around 70 Mya, resulting in T. rex"